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Volume 8

Journal of Gastrointestinal & Digestive System

ISSN: 2161-069X

Bariatric Surgery 2018 & Gastro 2018

March 15-16, 2018

JOINT EVENT

12

th

Global Gastroenterologists Meeting

3

rd

International Conference on Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery

&

March 15-16, 2018 Barcelona, Spain

Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB). Is diabetes Mellityse tyoe 2 actually “cured”?

Mogens Fenger

University Hospital of Copenhagen, Denmark

R

oux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB) is widely applied to ameliorate morbid obesity, including diabetes in people

with type 2 diabetes. The latter often vanish a few days after surgery for many, but not in all patients before any weight reduction

has occurred. The explanation for this change in metabolic status is poorly understood, but the observation may suggest that the fates

of obesity and diabetes are only partly linked metabolic conditions. The trajectories of weight reduction differ significantly between

groups and any sub-populations of groups, the latter identified by the distance between individual trajectories using a k-means

procedure. This suggests that different domains in the enormous genetic network governing basic metabolism are perturbed in

obesity and diabetes, and in fact some of the patients are affected by two distinct diseases: obesity and diabetes mellitus type 2. Thus,

the obesity part of the glycaemic derangement may have been ameliorated by RYGB (at least to some extent), but some defects of the

diabetic state had not. It could actually be argued that the diabetics are not transformed into a non-diabetic state, as the true reference

is the non-diabetics RYGB patients. Compared to this reference population, pivotal variables related to metabolism and diabetes

remains significantly different.

Biography

Mogens Fenger MD is an expert in in population and medical genetics. Focus of his research is implementation of information theoretical aspects and network

structures in his research of genetics of obesity and diabetes mellitus type 2. Dr. Fenger had established a biobank harboring more 1.000 RYGB patients. He

collaborates with major institutions in Denmark and abroad.

mogens.fenger@regionh.dk

Mogens Fenger, J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2161-069X-C1-064